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CONTRIBUTING DISCIPLINES TO CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT Dr K.O.Oloruntegbe

CONTRIBUTING DISCIPLINES TO CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT Dr K.O.Oloruntegbe. Disciplines to examine in this presentation include 1. Philosophical 2. Psychological, and 3. Sociological Foundations. Names and Scholars of note include: Joan Jacques Rousseau, John Dewey, Jean Piaget,

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CONTRIBUTING DISCIPLINES TO CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT Dr K.O.Oloruntegbe

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  1. CONTRIBUTING DISCIPLINES TO CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT DrK.O.Oloruntegbe

  2. Disciplines to examine in this presentation include • 1. Philosophical • 2. Psychological, and • 3. Sociological • Foundations

  3. Names and Scholars of note include: • Joan Jacques Rousseau, • John Dewey, • Jean Piaget, • Jerome Bruner, • David Ausubel, • Robert Gange, etc

  4. They are respectively noted for : • Essentialism in education, • Progressivism in education, • Stages of cognitive development in children. Children learn by experience and by experimenting, • Spiral curriculum, making links and connections between children’s basic ideas and skills and learning; • Learning hierarchy and prerequisite • Expository learning and use of advanced organizers,

  5. PHILOSOPHICAL FOUDATION OF CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

  6. PERENIALISM AND RECONSTRUCTIONISM These are another opposing schools of thought like the essentialism and progressivism. To the Perennialists, the aim of education is to ensure that students acquire understanding about the great ideas of Western civilization. These ideas have the potential for solving problems in any era.

  7. . • NOTE ON ESSENTIALISM AND PROGRESSIVISM IN EDUCATION • Essentialism and Progressivism are terms currently used to represent two schools of thought that have been in conflict over a long period of time. • The conflict may be indicated by pairing such concepts as • EffortvsInterest; • DisciplinevsFreedom; • Race experience vsIndividual experience;

  8. Teacher-initiativevsLearner-initiative; Logical organizationvsPsychological; • SubjectvsActivities; • Remote goal vs immediate goal; and the like. • The two schools of thought differ primarily in the relative emphasis given to each term as compared with its mate. For example, the Progressives lay emphasis on interest while the Essentialists would maintain that interest grows out of efforts to learn.

  9. Whereas the Progressives see teacher-initiative in learning as a necessary evil, the Essentialists argue that it is adult responsibility to guide the education of the immature child. The latter advocates child-centered curriculum. • Inclusive education and the current emphasis by the UNESCO that “No Child Should be Left Behind” may be an offshoot of progressive theory of education.

  10. The center and focus of the Progressives is that we start with the child as a growing and a developing person and help him live and grow best, live now as a child, live richly. The child should be treated as a “miniature adult” to be prepared only for adulthood. The tendency of the Progressives has been to discredit formal, organized, and abstract learning in support of effective participation of the child in flexible and active and hands-on

  11. The focus is to teach ideas that are everlasting, to seek enduring truth which are constant, not changing, as the natural and human worlds at their most essential level, do not change. They see humans as rational beings whose minds need to be developed.

  12. The curriculum should emphasize cultural literacy, stressing students’ growth in enduring disciplines. Literature, arts, core and general education are advocated. Advocates iclude Robert Maynard Hutchins and Mortimer Adler

  13. The Reconstructionists on the other hand focus on social questions and curriculum that highlights social reform as the aim of education. • Sometimes referred to as Critical Theorists, the reconstrucionists believe that system must be changed to overcome oppression and improve human conditions.

  14. To them, curriculum should focus on students’ experience and taking social actions on real problems, such as violence, hunger, international terrorism, inflation and inequality. • Strategies for dealing with controversial issues (particularly in social studies and literature), inquiry and dialogue are the focus. Community-based learning and bringing the world into the classroom are also strategies.

  15. Comparison of Attributes of Educational Philosophies

  16. Psychological Foundation Of CurriculumDevelopment

  17. Psychological consideration constitutes one of the most important aspects in curriculum development. The whole area of educational relies on its model. Psychology presents the frame of education.

  18. The bulk of the concepts, the principles, theories and so on. Therefore we cannot talk about curriculum without educational psychology. It is the vehicle upon which curriculum sits and rides.

  19. Jean Piaget And Curriculum Development According to the Piagetian model, the development of the human intellect progresses through four qualitatively different stages, namely

  20. Sensory motor stage: 0 - 2 years; • Preoperational stage: 2 – 7 years • Concrete operational stage: 7 – 11 years; and • Formal operational stage: 11 years +

  21. In the first stage children are at home with parents; the second they are in early primary, the third they are in the late primary; in the fourth they are in late primary and secondary school in Nigerian educational system.

  22. Implications of Piaget’s theory to Curriculum Development Piaget asserted that it is not possible to jump one stage to another, but it is possible to reach adulthood without ever reaching the forth stage-the formal operation stage. The implication of this is concerned with the possibility of accelerating the pupils through the four stages of mental development.

  23. The role of teachers and the school therefore is to accelerate the pupils through the stages as quickly as possible. The theory provides basis for streaming, that is why you were not given all your undergraduate courses the first year you got the university

  24. Several cross-cultural studies revealed that Nigerian and African children from big cities- the so called opportune children appear to be two years lagging behind their European and American counterparts. In effect, the kind of materials we develop for teaching say primary six children in British schools can only be useful to Junior Secondary Two pupils in Nigeria. We cannot adopt these nations’ curriculum enblock, but we can adapt.

  25. The pre-operation and concrete operation children by design will find themselves in the Nursery and Primary Schools levels of our educational system. Piaget affirms that children at these levels are not capable of abstract reasoning.Learning at these levels can be enhanced by the use of concrete materials.

  26. The best method of teaching therefore in not only that that employs the use of teaching facilities but also affords the exploration of the child natural environment Their learning must be through hands-on investigattion – Learning by doing – constrructing, dismantling and re-constructing, playing, planning using concrete etc

  27. Jerome Bruner Like Piaget, Bruner believes that people pass through different stages in their cognitive development. But Bruner places a much greater emphasis than Piaget does on, the role played by both language and the environment.

  28. Bruner asserted that the major purpose of cognitive developments is to provide people with a model of the world and a reality, a model that can be used to solve the problems of living. This model of the world include internal system for storing information that people gain from experiences they have interacting with objects, people, words, and ideas. There are three stages in Bruner system: Enactive, Iconic and Symbolic.

  29. Implication for Teaching & Learning Bruner advocates learning through discovery and therefore believes that teachers should provide problem situations that stimulate students to discover for themselves the structure of the subject matter.

  30. Bruner equally believes that classroom learning should take place inductively moving from specific examples presented by the teacher to generalizations about the structure of the subject that are discovered by the students. The teacher organizes the class in such a way that the students learn through their own active involvements.

  31. Students are presented with intriguing questions, baffling situations or interesting problems. Instead of explaining how to solve the problem, the teacher provides the appropriate materials and encourages students to make observation, form hypothesis and test solution.

  32. Bruner equally suggested integrated curriculum-an inter-disciplinary pattern organized around a particular concept or topic such as energy, population etc. Energy as a concept can be approached in a unified whole without undue emphasis on compartmentalization into several science disciplines. Integrated curriculum is recent and important in view of the fact that education itself as a process is tending towards integration producing integrated and balanced personalities.

  33. Spiral curriculum-a radical organization of curriculum across all grade levels is included in Bruner pattern of curriculum. He believes that any topic or subject can be taught effectively in an intellectually honest form to any child at any level provided the topic is adequately simplified. By implication many topics or subjects that were in the past, exclusive preserve of the senior classes, are now being taught at lower levels.

  34. Robert Gagne Gagne put forward the theories of “Learning Prerequisite” and “Learning Hierarchy”. In these theories, Gagne believes that the learning of a concept or a skill depends upon the learning of prerequisite concepts or skills. In addition to the theory of learning prerequisite and learning hierarchy, Gagne developed five-category system for examining the different types of learning outcomes.

  35. These are: • intellectual skills; • verbal information; • Attitudes; • motor skills; • and cognitive strategies. Each type of learning is encouraged by a different set of learning conditions. Therefore one aspect of instruction is to create conditions that are favourable for the type of learning expected of students in a particular situation.

  36. David Ausubel Ausubel’s view of learning offers an interesting contrast to those of Bruner. His view is that learning should occur through reception, not discovery. Teachers should present materials to students in a carefully organized, sequenced, and somewhat finished form.

  37. Students will then receive the most usable material. He called this method “expository learning”. The use of this method is, for the most part, confined to what Ausubel refers to as meaningful verbal learning, or the learning of verbal information, ideas, and relationships among verbal concepts.

  38. There are four characteristics to Ausubel’s expository approach to teaching. • First, it calls for a great deal of interaction between the teacher and the students. Although the teacher may do the initial presentation, the students’ ideals and responses are solicited throughout each lesson.

  39. Second, it makes great use of examples. • Third, it is deduced and • Finally, it is sequential. Certain steps must be followed in the presentation of the material. Essentially these are the initial presentation of an “advance organizer” followed by subordinate content.

  40. Advance Organizer: A lesson following Ausubel’s suggested strategy always begins with an advance organizer. Meaningful learning is most likely to occur when there is a potential fit between the students cognitive structure and the material to be learned. The use of advanced is meant to make this fit more likely.

  41. The purpose of advance organizers is either to give student the information they will need to make sense of the in coming lesson or to help them remember and use information they already have but which they may not realize is relevant to the lesson. The organizer thus acts as a kind of conceptual bridge between new material and old.

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